Letters from an American - July 19, 2024
Episode Date: July 20, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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July 19, 2024. Today, a Russian court sentenced 32-year-old Wall Street Journal reporter Evan
Gershkovich to 16 years in a high-security penal colony after convicting him of espionage in a secret three-day trial.
The U.S. government considers Gershkovich wrongly detained,
a rare designation signifying that he is being held as a political bargaining chip.
Today, President Joe Biden said that Gershkovich was targeted by the Russian government because he is a journalist and an American.
We are pushing hard for Evan's release and will continue to do so.
He added, journalism is not a crime.
We will continue to stand strong for press freedom in Russia and worldwide
and stand against all those who seek to attack the press or target journalists.
those who seek to attack the press or target journalists. Last night, a faulty update of software from cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike crashed computer systems all over the world.
Banks and hospitals were locked out of their own programs and government services shut down.
In the U.S., more than 2,600 flights were canceled and 9,000 were delayed.
Bloomberg's David Rovella quoted Australian security consultant Troy Hunt.
I don't think it's too early to call it, Hunt said.
This will be the largest IT outage in history.
Also making history last night was the final night of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the night on which former President Donald J. Trump accepted the party's presidential nomination.
killing one attendee and badly wounding two others. The convention was billed by Republican operatives as a way for Trump to rebrand himself as a candidate of unity. This was certainly the
way many major newspapers billed Trump's acceptance speech this morning in stories that, as media
journalist Parker Malloy noted, were probably based on prepared remarks delivered
to news agencies in advance of the speech. But it was not how the evening played out.
Since Saturday's shooting, it has been notable that there has not been a medical review of Trump's
injuries, although he has said he was injured by a bullet that ripped through his ear.
This matters not only because of the
extent of his injuries, but also because Trump has made the story part of his identity without
any fact check, and the media appears simply to be letting it go on Trump's say-so, something that
adds to the sense that media outlets are treating Trump and Biden differently. Last night, Trump perhaps tried to address this lack
by recounting last Saturday's shooting. Interestingly, he did not say he was hit by a
bullet, but that when he felt the injury, he thought, it can only be a bullet. Josh Marshall
of Talking Points Memo today noted a report from local Pennsylvania TV station WPXI
that four motorcycle officers standing within feet of Trump suffered minor injuries from flying debris.
Trump has likely cut off further discussion of the topic by saying it is too painful to tell the story again.
With that story behind him, Trump hit the theme of unity, saying he would
bring the country together. The discord and division in our society must be healed. We must
heal it quickly. We are bound together by a single fate, a single destiny, he said. We rise together
or we fall apart. I am running to be president for all of America, not half of America, because there is no victory
in winning for half of America.
So tonight, with faith and devotion, I proudly accept your nomination for president of the
United States.
But that was just in the first 10 minutes.
Then Trump ignored the teleprompter and things veered
far off course, reflecting the candidate that has stayed in the safe spaces of Mar-a-Lago
and rallies of his loyalists for years. Trump rambled for more than 90 minutes,
making it the longest acceptance speech in U.S. history and outlasting the interest of the audience, some of whom fell asleep.
He went on to recite his usual litany of lies, that Democrats cheated in the 2020 presidential
election. They did not. That crime is going up. It's plummeting. That inflation is the worst we've
ever had. It's around 3%. The worst was around 23%. The Democrats want to quadruple people's taxes.
CNN fact checker Daniel Dale calls this imaginary, and so on. Dale called it a remarkably dishonest
acceptance speech. Journalist James Fallows posted, of the maybe 10,000 political speeches I've heard over the years, this was
overall the worst. Statistician Nate Silver's judgment was harsher in a way. He began with,
it's a weird but a pretty good speech, then posted, semi-retract this tweet. This speech
is boring AF, but there are worse things politically speaking than being boring.
this speech is boring af but there are worse things politically speaking than being boring
shortly after came fully retract and rescind sometimes it seems like both parties are trying to throw this election msnbc's chris hayes watched the unhinged speech and concluded this is not a
colossus this is not the big bad wolf this is not a vigus. This is not the big bad wolf. This is not a vigorous and incredibly
deft political communicator. This is an old man in decline who's been doing the same shtick for
a very long time, and it's really wearing thin. The point, though, as Trump meandered through
attacks on immigrants and a diatribe about the fictional character, Cannibal Hannibal Lecter,
who he might think was real, as it always has been, was to present a picture of the U.S.
under siege by enemies who are persecuting him because he represents true Americans and that
he must be returned to office because only he can vanquish those enemies. Greg Sargent of the New Republic noted that Trump
cannot offer a unity message because Trump himself knows the MAGA masses will not be satiated without
expansive displays of rage, cruelty, and sadism directed at hated outgroups and designated enemies of MAGA. For years, observers have
noted that Trump's approach to politics is patterned on the kayfabe at the heart of
professional wrestling. Kayfabe is the performance aspect of professional wrestling in which the
actors play out relationships and scenes in which there are good and evil, love and hate, loyalty and betrayal.
According to journalist Abraham Josephine Reisman,
In old school kayfabe, the actors never let their masks slip.
And while the audience knew what they were seeing must be fake, they played along with the illusion.
be fake. They played along with the illusion. But in the 1990s, the barrier between reality and illusion blurred as wrestlers and promoters tried to increase the viability of the fading
industry by tossing reality into the performances. Real life insults, the more outrageous the better,
and real life events. Decoding what was real and what was not drove
engagement until in 1999, an estimated 18% of Americans, about 50 million people, called
themselves fans. This neo-KFAB, Reisman wrote in the New York Times in 2023, rests on a slippery, ever-wobbling jumble of truths,
half-truths, and outright falsehoods, all delivered with the utmost passion and commitment.
Neo-KFAB, Reisman wrote, turns the world into a hall of mirrors from which it is nearly
impossible to escape. It rots the mind and eats the soul. Trump participated in a storyline in
this neo-KFAB with world wrestling entertainment owner Vince McMahon in 2007, in part billed as a
battle over hair. Eventually, he was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, and many observers have made the link between Neo K. Fabe and his
approach to politics. Indeed, he even blended the two explicitly when he chose McMahon's wife,
Linda, to head the U.S. Small Business Administration during his presidency.
Neo K. Fabe and politics came together again last night at the Republican National Convention as Linda McMahon, wrestler
Hulk Hogan, and musician Kid Rock, whose music has been featured at wrestling events and who
is also a member of the WWE Hall of Fame, all participated. So all you criminals, all you low
lives, all you scumbags, what you gonna do when Donald Trump and all the Trump-a-maniacs run wild on
you, brother? Hogan yelled to wild applause after ripping off his shirt to show a Trump Vance shirt.
Like the other performers at the convention, he painted a portrait of Trump's presidency
and of the United States since Trump left office, that was a fantasy of good and evil.
Hogan reinforced that there was no way Trump was going to reach toward unity in Milwaukee.
His approach to the world cannot be moderated. It depends on the idea that there are two teams
in the performance, and one must vanquish the other. Part of that storyline requires rewriting
not just the recent past, but our history. At the convention last night, Donald Trump Jr.'s fiance,
Kimberly Guilfoyle, said, it is no wonder that the heroes who stormed the beaches of Normandy
and faced down communism sadly say they don't recognize our country anymore.
But the Allied soldiers in World War II were not fighting communism.
They were fighting fascism.
The three great Allied powers were Great Britain, the United States, and the communist Soviet Union.
It might be that Guilfoyle misspoke, or that she doesn't know even the most basic facts of our
history. Or it might be that by rewriting that history to put America on the side of the fascists,
people like Guilfoyle hope to make that alliance more
palatable to MAGA followers today. Letters from an American was produced at
Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.